Forest Cover updates 2015 (and the number of trees on the planet)

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The United Nations site for the ‘Millennium Development Goals Indicators’ (MDG Indicators) has published the estimated Forest Cover as percentage of land area of 225 countries. The table at the bottom includes only 83 selected countries with Climate Debt in ClimatePositions (the fraction of the Climate Debt caused by Forest Cover-change is revealed). However, Forest Cover alone is a poor ecosystem-indicator and therefore the area with the precious Primary Forests is also included in ClimatePositions (read the article ‘Forest Cover, Primary Forests and Climate Debt’).

Forest Cover is determined both by the presence of trees and the absence of other predominant land uses. The trees should reach a minimum height of 5 m. Areas under reforestation that are expected to reach a tree height of 5 m and a canopy cover of 10% are included, as are areas which are expected to regenerate after for example human intervention. Included are also areas with bamboo and palms provided that height and canopy cover criteria are met as well as forest roads, firebreaks and small open areas. Excluded are trees in agricultural production systems (fruit plantations and agroforestry) and trees in urban parks and gardens.

According to the ‘Millennium Development Goals Report 2015’ the planet’s Forest Cover is about 30% of the land area. In recent years, the loss of forest area has slowed, due to a slight decrease in deforestation and an increase in afforestation, as well as the natural expansion of forests. Roughly, one third of the global Forest Cover is Primary Forests. The planet’s Forest Cover has decreased about 3% since 1990 and Primary Forests has decreased about 3% since 2000.

A different approach on forests is revealed in a new study: ‘Mapping tree density at a global scale’, published in the journal Nature. Read also the article ‘Scientists reveal there are 3tn trees in the world‘ from Guardian. Using a combination of satellite and ground measurements (400,000 squares of 100×100 m) researchers estimated that there are about 3.04 trillion trees of more than 10 cm in diameter on the planet¹. The study finds that nearly half the world’s trees (45.8%) are lost since the start of civilization due to human activities. Today, the net loss is around 0.33% annually (which is considerably higher than the loss of Forest Cover).

To illustrate the negative development the loss of trees (0.33% loss per year) can be compared to the growing world population (0.33% loss per year) to the increasing world population (1.12% growth per year): Today, the planet hosts 420 trees per human … in 2000 the number was around 524 trees per human. In prehistoric times, 12,000 years ago, the number of trees was probably one-two million for each of the four million humans.

As for Forest Cover, the number of trees is not a reliably metric for measuring the health of an ecosystem (the Amazon rainforests outperform by far a plantation of many of the same trees). Supposedly, the study do not change our understanding of the role that forests plays in slowing manmade climate change because the amount of carbon which the world’s trees can store is already well-studied.

The table below shows the Forest Cover in 1990 (ranking), 2010 and 2015 as percentage of the total area of 81 countries with Climate Debt and India and Lithuania with sufficient Forest Cover-increase to cut the small Climate Debt to zero. The three last columns show the updated accumulated Climate Debt per capita and the amount caused by changed Forest Cover since 1990 and 2010.

The table is read as follows: Honduras forests covered 72.7% of the land area in 1990 and 41.0% in 2015. The current Climate Debt is $25 per capita, of which $25 is due to reduced Forest Cover since 1990 and $6 is due to reduced Forest Cover since 2010. In other words: Had Honduras preserved its Forest Cover since 2010, then the Climate Debt would have been $19 ($25 minus $6) today. Note that the table ignores the indicator of Primary Forests (the change since 2000).

Forest Cover

.

.

.

Climate Debt

Due to Forest

Due to Forest

as percentage

.

.

.

per capita

Cover-change

Cover-change

of total area

1990

2010

2015

(latest)

1990-2015

2010-2015

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Honduras

72.7

46.4

41.0

$25

-$25

-$6

Finland

72.0

73.1

73.1

$2,610

$78

$0

Indonesia

69.0

54.9

53.0

$73

-$44

-$5

Sweden

68.4

68.4

68.4

$1,142

$0

$0

Japan

68.4

68.5

68.5

$2,189

$6

$0

Malaysia

68.1

67.3

67.6

$1,149

-$9

$5

Panama

67.8

63.2

62.1

$307

-$80

-$15

Brazil

65.4

59.6

59.0

$148

-$39

-$4

South Korea

64.5

64.1

63.7

$4,397

-$35

-$17

Venezuela

59.0

53.9

52.9

$696

-$110

-$18

Slovenia

59.0

61.9

62.0

$1,684

$115

$4

Bolivia

58.0

51.9

50.6

$22

-$13

-$2

Ecuador

52.8

52.1

50.5

$37

-$9

-$6

Estonia

52.0

52.7

52.7

$506

$13

$13

Latvia

51.0

53.9

54.0

$45

$44

$1

Russia

49.4

49.8

49.8

$1,459

$16

$0

Angola

48.9

46.9

46.4

$37

-$5

-$1

Trinidad and T.

46.9

44.1

45.7

$14,136

-$98

$131

Austria

45.8

46.8

46.9

$2,436

$62

$6

Bosnia and H.

43.3

42.8

42.8

$436

-$3

$0

Slovakia

40.0

40.3

40.3

$641

$10

$0

Norway

39.9

39.8

39.8

$3,488

-$9

$0

Canada

38.3

38.2

38.2

$5,374

-$12

$0

Portugal

37.5

35.9

35.3

$926

-$53

-$14

Belarus

37.5

41.1

41.6

$274

$76

$9

New Zealand

36.7

38.6

38.6

$1,949

$90

$0

Macedonia

36.2

39.6

39.6

$15

$34

$0

Mexico

35.9

34.2

34.0

$304

-$21

-$2

Czech Republic

34.0

34.4

34.5

$1,144

$24

$5

Croatia

33.1

34.3

34.3

$512

$19

$0

United States

33.0

33.7

33.8

$6,378

$136

$17

Germany

32.4

32.7

32.8

$1,726

$30

$8

Jamaica

31.8

31.1

31.0

$181

-$5

-$1

Lithuania

31.0

34.6

34.8

$0

$68

$0

Bulgaria

30.1

34.4

35.2

$548

$90

$14

Poland

29.2

30.5

30.8

$510

$47

$9

Switzerland

28.8

30.9

31.4

$954

$162

$31

Romania

27.7

28.3

29.8

$2

$33

$24

Spain

27.7

36.6

36.9

$1,689

$353

$12

Thailand

27.4

31.8

32.1

$373

$31

$2

Serbia

26.4

31.0

31.1

$527

$44

$1

France

26.4

30.0

31.0

$1,264

$229

$50

Italy

25.8

30.7

31.6

$1,009

$262

$41

Greece

25.6

30.3

31.5

$1,744

$241

$49

Singapore

24.4

23.4

23.4

$25,344

-$264

$0

Botswana

24.2

20.0

19.1

$81

-$35

-$6

Dominican Rep.

22.9

37.6

41.0

$0

$67

$9

Belgium

22.4

22.5

22.6

$4,485

$19

$9

India

21.5

23.5

23.8

$0

$3

$0

Chile

20.5

21.8

23.9

$538

$39

$24

Mauritius

20.4

19.1

19.2

$518

-$9

$1

Hungary

19.7

22.4

22.7

$396

$72

$7

Cyprus

17.4

18.7

18.7

$1,825

$55

$0

Australia

16.7

16.0

16.2

$7,255

-$56

$22

China

16.7

21.3

22.1

$421

$24

$4

Ukraine

16.0

16.5

16.7

$169

$9

$2

Lebanon

12.8

13.4

13.4

$461

$6

$0

Denmark

12.8

13.8

14.4

$873

$135

$51

Turkey

12.5

14.6

15.2

$322

$25

$5

Armenia

11.9

11.7

11.8

$156

$0

$0

United Kingdom

11.5

12.6

13.0

$1,144

$96

$26

Namibia

10.6

8.9

8.4

$27

-$6

-$1

Netherlands

10.2

11.1

11.1

$4,271

$93

$0

Turkmenistan

8.8

8.8

8.8

$1,408

$0

$0

South Africa

7.6

7.6

7.6

$890

$0

$0

Uzbekistan

7.2

7.7

7.3

$86

$0

-$1

Ireland

6.7

10.5

10.9

$2,914

$271

$26

Israel

6.1

7.1

7.6

$3,029

$57

$19

Iran

4.9

5.8

5.8

$1,027

$11

$0

Uruguay

4.6

9.9

10.5

$117

$41

$4

Tunisia

4.1

6.4

6.7

$24

$12

$1

United Arab E.

2.9

3.8

3.9

$18,329

$492

$49

Iraq

1.8

1.9

1.9

$235

$1

$0

Kazakhstan

1.3

1.2

1.2

$1,398

-$4

$0

Jordan

1.1

1.1

1.1

$128

$0

$0

Algeria

0.7

0.8

0.8

$91

$1

$0

Saudi Arabia

0.5

0.5

0.5

$8,285

$0

$0

Bahrain

0.3

0.7

0.8

$8,930

$98

$20

Kuwait

0.2

0.4

0.4

$32,112

$75

$0

Egypt

0.1

0.1

0.1

$75

$0

$0

Libya

0.1

0.1

0.1

$1,543

$0

$0

Oman

0.1

0.1

0.1

$8,159

$0

$0

Qatar

0.1

0.1

0.1

$35,927

$0

$0

.

¹The trees are located as follows: 46% in tropical and subtropical forests, 24% in boreal regions, 20% in temperate regions and 10% elsewhere.

.

Sources on national forest cover and primary forests: United Nations (UN) (links in the menu “Calculations”).